
Welcome Rev. Ken and your expertise will be doubly welcome.
Please feel free to send pictures too, cause we love da pictures
and truthfully they help a lot.
Miriam
Chuck Craven wrote: 220v circuit cannot be GFI protected as both wires are hot and can supply an uneven current distribution. Making a GFI useless.
Chuck
Rev. Ken wrote:I'm new here and i don't want to upset anyone. But I have been a Union Electrician for 18 years, there is no such thing as two phase it is still single phase. Even tho you have two hot wires we stil lcal lit single phase.
And to correct what someone else said. While the black wire does carry the curent to the outlet the white does not carry it back. The reason for the neutral is to carry the unbalanced load and with anyone plugging up to a 110volt line at a camp ground you will never have an unbalanced load. I guess i've gone on long enough.
Have a Blessed day.
Leon wrote:Chuck Craven wrote: 220v circuit cannot be GFI protected as both wires are hot and can supply an uneven current distribution. Making a GFI useless.
Chuck
Look at any 220 V pool pump or spa equipment and they ARE protected by GFI 220 breakers. That's a requirement by most codes. A GFI senses the current going out and compares it to the current comming back, whether it is between the two legs of the 220 or any imbalance returning on the nuetral. If anything is missing, that means some is going to ground through whatever means and the breaker trips. I put two 220 GFI breakers in for a spa at almost $100 each! It ain't cheap but it can be done.
sdscheib_76 wrote:Hello all,
Here is my problem. I have read a couple electrical wiring books but I am still clueless. All I want to do is run 1 light w/ switch, a small ac unit, 1 two plug outlet, and a small fridge. I don't want a battery and want to plug into whatever outlet a campground has ( is this shore power? Thanks so much!
Scott
Leon wrote:There is only one neutral connection to the "pair" and it shares that neutral back to the bus. If a leak to ground occurs on either hot it will trip. I know it will because we tested it when we installed it. If a leakage to ground on one hot trips both breakers, am I GFIing 110 or 220?
Rev. Ken wrote:I'm new here and i don't want to upset anyone. But I have been a Union Electrician for 18 years, there is no such thing as two phase it is still single phase. Even tho you have two hot wires we stil lcal lit single phase.
And to correct what someone else said. While the black wire does carry the curent to the outlet the white does not carry it back. The reason for the neutral is to carry the unbalanced load and with anyone plugging up to a 110volt line at a camp ground you will never have an unbalanced load. I guess i've gone on long enough.
Have a Blessed day.
Rev. Ken wrote:I'm a bit confused about the purpose of the white wire here. If the current does not return on the white wire, just where does all that current go? I always thought that current needed a complete circuit in order to flow, and that you could get a reliable current reading with a clamp on ammeter whether you clamped around the black or the white wire.
The white wire does complete the circuit but the current doesn't go anywhere untill you use it, it sits there and waits for you. An ampmeter will only work when clamped around the hot wire not the neutral.
Have a Blessed day.
Rev. Ken
GeorgeTelford wrote:Rev Ken said
But I have been a Union Electrician for 18 years
Given some of the totally inaccurate things you are posting here regarding electricity, the above statement is positively frightening.
And to correct what someone else said. While the black wire does carry the curent to the outlet the white does not carry it back. The reason for the neutral is to carry the unbalanced load and with anyone plugging up to a 110volt line at a camp ground you will never have an unbalanced load. I guess i've gone on long enough.
This is totally and utterly wrong in every respect
I do not understand these reference's to an "energised circuit", unless current is being drawn it cannot be measured anywhere.
Larwyn, as pretty much described all of the law that covers this and is only slightly wrong in one very minor respect;
This woud be true whether the switch was on or off, or the bulb were good or burned open. I must really be confused here........
If the circuit is broken (open) no current is drawn ergo there is no current to measure.
here is a basic primer on current in circuit
http://www.tpub.com/neets/book1/chapter3/1-25.htm
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